Gharbi-Chihi J, Bismuth J, Lissitzky S, Torresani J
Biochim Biophys Acta. 1983 Feb 7;750(2):282-90. doi: 10.1016/0005-2760(83)90030-9.
The effect of triiodothyronine on the activity and amount of the key lipogenic enzyme fatty acid synthetase was studied in differentiating preadipocyte cells (ob17) isolated from ob/ob mouse epididymal fat pad. In the presence of physiological concentrations of insulin, the acquisition of adipose morphology was accompanied by a parallel increase (10--15-fold) in synthetase specific activity and radioimmunoassayable amount relative to soluble cellular proteins. Inclusion of T3 at confluence significantly enhanced synthetase activity and content, with a maximum of 1.5--2-fold above controls at the physiological 1.5 nM concentration, whether insulin is present or not. During adipose conversion, T3 increased the development of enzyme activity and after a longer lag period, the accumulation of the synthetase. Our results suggest that the stimulating effect of T3 upon synthetase activity could involve as a first step the activation of preexisting inactive synthetase molecules and as a second one an increased accumulation of activable synthetase. After longer culture periods, inactive radioimmunoassayable synthetase accumulated.